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Auteur Martin Dempster |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
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Grading gems : appraising the quality of research for social work and social care / Brian J. Taylor in The british journal of social work, 2, vol. 37 (fév. 2007)
[article]
Titre : Grading gems : appraising the quality of research for social work and social care Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Brian J. Taylor, Auteur ; Michael Donnelly, Auteur ; Martin Dempster, Auteur Editeur : Oxford : Oxford university press - GB - Oxford Année de publication : 2007 Article en page(s) : pp. 335-354 Langues : Français (fre) Catégories : Cardijn
Evaluation # Travail socialMots-clés : Evaluation Travail social Résumé : "The impetus towards basing practice and policy decisions more explicitly on sound research requires tools to facilitate the systematic appraisal of the quality of research encompassing a diverse range of methods and designs.Five exemplar tools were developed and assessed in terms of their usefulness in selecting studies for inclusion in a systematic review.The widely use "hierarchy of evidence" was adapted and used to appraise internal validity.Four tools were then developed to appraise the external validity dimensions of generalizability (two scales) and methods of data collection (two scales).Methods of combining the scores generated by each tool were explored. Qualitative and quantitative studies were appraised,not separated into two spheres but by using complementary tools developed to appraise different aspects of rigour.There was a high level of agreement between researchers in applying the tools to twenty-two studies on decision making by professionals about the longterm care of older people.The scales for internal validity and generalizability discriminated between the qualities of studies appropriately.The two tools to appraise data collection gave diverse results.Excluding studies that scored in the lowest category on any scale appeared to be the scoring system that wa most justifiable.This approach is presented to simulate debate about the practical application of the evidence-based initiative to social work and social care.This study may assist in developing clearer definitions and common language about appraising rigour that should further the process of selecting robust research for synthesis to inform practice and policy decisions." Permalink : http://cdocs.helha.be/pmblln/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=12613
in The british journal of social work > 2, vol. 37 (fév. 2007) . - pp. 335-354[article] Grading gems : appraising the quality of research for social work and social care [texte imprimé] / Brian J. Taylor, Auteur ; Michael Donnelly, Auteur ; Martin Dempster, Auteur . - Oxford : Oxford university press - GB - Oxford, 2007 . - pp. 335-354.
Langues : Français (fre)
in The british journal of social work > 2, vol. 37 (fév. 2007) . - pp. 335-354
Catégories : Cardijn
Evaluation # Travail socialMots-clés : Evaluation Travail social Résumé : "The impetus towards basing practice and policy decisions more explicitly on sound research requires tools to facilitate the systematic appraisal of the quality of research encompassing a diverse range of methods and designs.Five exemplar tools were developed and assessed in terms of their usefulness in selecting studies for inclusion in a systematic review.The widely use "hierarchy of evidence" was adapted and used to appraise internal validity.Four tools were then developed to appraise the external validity dimensions of generalizability (two scales) and methods of data collection (two scales).Methods of combining the scores generated by each tool were explored. Qualitative and quantitative studies were appraised,not separated into two spheres but by using complementary tools developed to appraise different aspects of rigour.There was a high level of agreement between researchers in applying the tools to twenty-two studies on decision making by professionals about the longterm care of older people.The scales for internal validity and generalizability discriminated between the qualities of studies appropriately.The two tools to appraise data collection gave diverse results.Excluding studies that scored in the lowest category on any scale appeared to be the scoring system that wa most justifiable.This approach is presented to simulate debate about the practical application of the evidence-based initiative to social work and social care.This study may assist in developing clearer definitions and common language about appraising rigour that should further the process of selecting robust research for synthesis to inform practice and policy decisions." Permalink : http://cdocs.helha.be/pmblln/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=12613 Exemplaires (1)
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